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Astrophysical signatures for axion(-like) particles WIMPs K. Zioutas University of Patras TAUP2005 updated CERN + Patras libraries ILIAS-CAST-CERN Axion Training. CERN / Geneve 30/11/2005.
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Astrophysical signatures for axion(-like) particles WIMPs K. Zioutas University of Patras TAUP2005 updated CERN+Patraslibraries ILIAS-CAST-CERN Axion Training CERN / Geneve 30/11/2005
Stellar observations in the visible + theory on stellar evolution ↛ stars might possess atmospheres … that produce X-rays. L.W. Acton, Magnetodynamic Phenomena in the Solar Atm. (1996) 3 The mechanism that heats the solar corona remains elusive. Everything above the photosphere … would not be there at all. M.J. Aschwanden, A.I. Poland, D.M. Rabin, A.R.A.A. 39 (2001) 75 C.J. Schrijver, A.A. van Ballegooijen, ApJ. 630 (1st September 2005) 552
Solar temperature distribution ↛ 2nd Law of Thermodynamics?solar corona problem Grotrian (1939) “The enigma of coronal heating represents one of the most challenging problems in astrophysics at the present time.” E. R. Priest, D. W. Longcope, J. Heyvaerts, ApJ. 624(2005)1057
↛2nd Law of Thermodynamics Heat transferhotter-to-cooler Suggestion: solar X-ray self-irradiation ? L. DiLella, K. Z. Astropart. Phys. 19 (2003) 145
Observational evidence for gravitationally trapped massive axion(-like) particles 100 MK? KK-axions ↓ generic ↓ gaγγ~9•10-14GeV-1 B⊙? 1.8MK KK model _ Tflare < 20MK Reconstructed X-ray spectrum non-flaring Sun @solar minimum[X]. [X]G. Peres, S. Orlando, F. Reale, R. Rosner, H. Hudson, ApJ. 528 (2000) 537 L. DiLella, K. Z., Astropart. Phys. 19 (2003) 145 Solar axion spectrum?
Quiet Sun X-rays as Signature for New Particles 26 August: off-pointing (JL Culhane, Adv. Space Res. 19 (1997) 1839) ● Diffuse emission. ●Hydrostatic equilibrium doesn’t fit observations. ● closed loops of increasing height … cannot reproduce the observed behaviour of T &ρ @ diffuse structure. ● AR emission … no strong correlation with Tplasma This suggests that the nature of coronal heating mechanism does not change through the cycle. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ●Soft X-RayEmission has been detected from a north polar coronal hole. (see Foley, Culhane, Acton, ApJ. 491 (1997) 933) Radial distance [R⊙] Soft X-ray surface brightness from the quiet Sun. Simulation with trapped solar KK-axions gaγγ<40•10-14GeV-1. Z., Dennerl, DiLella, Hoffmann, Jacoby, Papaevangelou, ApJ. 607 (2004) 575
RHESSI Major Events ****************************2005************************** October 18, 09:00 UT RHESSI was again put into drift mode to view the x-ray emission of the quiet Sun "out of the corner of its eye". This mode began at the time noted above. RHESSI was commanded back to the Sun at 06:10 UT on October 28, and arrived shortly after 08:00 UT on that day. The Sun was very quiet during this time, but anyone wishing to analyze data within that interval should contact the instrument team. 10 days July 19, 06:00 UT At this time, RHESSI was put in a new mode that let it drift up to 1 degree away from the Sun and slewed back, repeatedly. The purpose of this mode was to study the x-ray emission of the quiet Sun (the Sun was extremely quiet beginning at this time). RHESSI returned to normal operations at around 04:00 UT on July 26. If you wish to analyze any flares during this week, please contact the instrument team. 7 days +presentation next week.
mimic CAST ? indirect axion-signal?
magnetic fields of several kG in sunspots probably ~10 T in the tachocline (-200000 km) X-rays: γ⇄axion M. Aschwanden, Physics of the Solar Corona (2004) p.175 It is believed that much, if not all, of the magnetic flux penetrating the photosphere is aggregated in 200-300 km Ø, in which the field strength is of order 1.5 kGauss (~2% of the surface). Visible light: L⊙ ⇄Laxion P.A. Sturrock, ApJ. 521 (1999) 451 J. Sanchez Almeida A.& A. (2005) in press, astro-ph/0504339
Solar seismic models + the ν-predictions ...seismic models are very close to the real Sun in the regions of concern. But … as far as the internal rotation profile is not included in the study, new surprises may appear … 103-104 T 2-3 T 30-50 T - - - - -Bahcall etal. Magnetic fields simulated. The amplitudes of the fields have been normalized by their maximum intensity. S. Couvidat, S. Turck-Chieze, A. G. Kosovichev. ApJ. 599 (2003) 1434
CAST @ Sun ? P. Sikivie[1983] 2nd (transient) component for solar X-ray emission a +γBγorγ+γBa Ix~B2 solar X-rays below ~1 keV? + transient phenomena?
Sunspot numbers and coronal intensity X-rays http://soi.stanford.edu/press/aas06-02/
The magnetic field plays a crucial role in heating the solar corona (this has been known for many years) the exactenergy release mechanism(s)is(are) still unknown. the process by which it is converted into heat and other forms remainsa nagging unsolved problem. K. Galsgaard, C.E. Parnell, A.& A. 439 (August 2005) 335 R.B. Dahlburg, J.A. Klimchuk, S.K. Antiochos, ApJ. 622 (2005) 1191 the reconnection of B lines plays a key role in .. solar flares, CMEs …. (μ)flares⊗polarity inversion lines with strong shearedB lines. In ARs, …places with field as strong or stronger than in brightest features, but the corona is dimmer. ...a hidden processcontrols coronal heating. Emerging Φ⊗trigger transient brightenings (~1024 – 1028 ergs). ⇩ origin? M. Hahn et al., ApJ 629 (2005) 1135; M. Barta, M. Karlicky, ApJ (2005) in press D.A. Falconer et al., ApJ 482 (1997) 519; 593 (2003) 549 T. Shimizu, IAU Symp. No. 223 (2004) 345
SUNSPOTSYohkoh - XRTelescope <1.3 MK> quiet Sun Sunspots =“dark spots” T⇩ photosphere ~ 4500K heat flux problem inumbra+ penumbra Spruit, Scharmer, A.&A. (2005), astro-ph/0508504 Corona Soft X-ray fluxes T⇧ Sunspots: ~ 50 - 190 DN/s Quiet Sun: ~ 10 - 50 DN/s (ARs:~ 500 - 4000 DN/s) sunspot plasma parameters are higher than @ quiet-Sun B ~ 2 kGabove most sunspots! Solar Corona Problem <1.8 MK>Umbra Penumbra <2.4 MK> Temperature distributionsA.Nindos, M.R.Kundu, S.M.White, K.Shibasaki, N.Gopalswamy, ApJ. SUPPL. 130 (2000) 485 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- “… sunspots remain mysterious”. The penumbral mystery … the very reason for its existence unknown. http://www.solarphysics.kva.se/NatureNov2002/background.html
Yohkoh/BCS data analysis • 2 components for the coronal heating: • a universal Temperature in the quiet Sun & in ARs • basic corona heating ~ 2.5 MK • high Temperature above ARs • higher solar activity ~ 4 MK • T. Watanabe et al., Sol. Phys. 157 (1995) 169 2 different mechanisms are apparently involved in coronal heating ⊗ ARs: steady heating mechanism 3-5 MK transient heating due to magnetic reconnection ~10 MK T.Yoshida, S. Tsuneta, ApJ. 459 (1996) 342 A.C. Sterling, HS Hudson, T. Watanabe ApJ. 479 (1997) L149 • 2 different components:NOAA 7978Yohkoh • a steady heating mechanism (non-flaring) 3-5 MK • an independent mechanism for heating flares>5 MK both mechanisms energetically ~equal! T. Watanabe et al., Sol. Phys. 201 (2001) 1
Power-law index n of Lx ~ Bn=(time) YOHKOH / XRT The relation between the average solar soft X-ray intensity of the corona (<4.4keV) is ~B2 with an averaged index close to2. Benevolenskaya, Kosovichev, Lemen, Scherrer, Slater ApJ. 571 (2002) L181 Note: axion-to-photon oscillation ∝(BL)2 e.g., inCAST D.H.H. Hoffmann, K. Z., N.P.B S (2006) in press.
….. essentially NO correlation between the X-ray flux & the average line-of-sight magnetic field <B>. R. Wolfson, C.B. Roald, P.A. Sturrock, ApJ. 539 (2000) 995 +P.A. Sturrock, Private communication it resemblesPrimakoff effect.
The long-term evolution of AR 7978(S10o) Yohkoh / SXT Lx Lx B1.94±.12 X-ray flux outside flaring times in AR7978 ● increased steeply @flux emergence - - - - -+ - - - - - decreased @decay phase ~ filter independent Eγ < 4 keV B [Gauss] <X-ray flux> / (cm2 -AR7978)vs. magnetic field <B>(=total magnetic flux / ARsurface). Solid line: the linear fit; dotted lines: the 3σ error in the slope of the solid curve. Only the decaying phase (diamonds) is included in the fit July-Nov. 1996 • The only sizable and long-lived AR on the solar disk @ 5 solar rotations it produced 3 slow CMEs + 3 major flares, L. van Driel-Gesztelyi, et al., ApJ. 586 (2003) 579 + RHESSI observations often show hard x-ray emission from non-flaring active regions. American Geophysical Union, Fall Meeting 2005, abstract #SH11A-0242 (5-9/12/2005), Hannah, Hurford, Hudson, Title:A Search for Hard X-Ray Emission from the Quiet Spotless Sun
SUNSPOTS Umbral normalized continuum intensity vs. umbral field strength B. Plotted is the minimum value and the maximum value of B of each sunspot. Filled circles (1990–1991) Open circles (2000–2001) A number of fundamental questions remain unanswered. In the visible Umbral (min) Intensity (relative to Photosphere) 50% of the quiet Sun B [Gauss] What determines the intrinsic brightness of umbrae and penumbrae, in spite of the strong magnetic field which inhibits convection? Is an additional mechanism needed? How is the umbral chromosphere heated? Why are penumbrae brighter? …. S.K. Solanki, A.&A. Rev. 11 (2003) 153
Thanks Thomas Papaevangelou S.K. Solanki, A.&A. Rev. 11 (2003) 153
FLARES The precise causes of solar flares & CMEs is one of the great solar mysteries 2003 ⊗B what initiates the energy release? what makes some magnetic configurations more likely to flare than others? Fundamental question: how and why reconnection starts as an explosive process in flares? The trigger site of flares is still elusive. Understanding how energy is released in solar flares is a central question in astrophysics 1999 G. Barnes, D. W. Longcope, K. D. Leka, ApJ. 629 (2005) 561 K. Kusano, T. Maeshiro, T. Yokoyama, T. Sakurai, ApJ. 610 (2004) 537 G. Allen Gary, L.R. Moore, ApJ. 611 (2004) 545 DH Hathaway, http://science.msfc.nasa.gov/ssl/pad/solar/quests.html (2003) Warren, Bookbinder, Forbes, Golub, Hudson, Reeves, Warshall ApJ. 527 (20.12.1999) L121 Less magnetic activity = fewer solar X-rays. The magnetic activity is determined by a magnetic dynamo within the Sun. http://star-www.st-andrews.ac.uk/~mrt2/XRU2a.pdf
SMART:orbiting X-ray detectorsdark moon large volume + backgr. Sun collaboration with Observatory Helsinki Search for massive ~axions spontaneous radiative decays aγγ
DIFFUSE X-RAY EMISSION OF THE GALACTIC CENTERChandra Background subtracted Diffuse emission detector background Point sources …this soft plasma is probably heated by supernovae, along with a small contribution from the winds of massive Wolf-Rayet and O stars. The kT~8 keV component is more spatially uniform… Neither supernova remnants nor WR/O stars are observed to produce thermal plasma hotter than ~3 keV. Moreover, a kT ~ 8 keV plasma would be too hot to be bound to the Galactic center, and therefore would form a slow wind or fountain of plasma. Alternative explanations for the hard diffuse emission that were intended to lessen the energy required are equally unsatisfying. The suggestion that the hard diffuse emission originates from undetected stellar X-ray sources is unlikely because there is no known class of source that is numerous enough, bright enough, and hot enough to produce the observed flux of kT 8 keV diffuse emission. We are left to conclude that either there is a significant shortcoming in our understanding of the mechanisms that heat the interstellar medium, or that a population of faint (< 1031 erg s−1), hard X-ray sources that are a factor of 10 more numerous than CVs remains to be discovered. M. Muno et al., ApJ. 613(2004) 326 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Chandraconfirmed the astonishing evidence of a diffuse, hot, plasma at T~90 MK to extend over a few 100 pc in GC (~ 9MK). R. Belmont et al., ApJL. (20.9.2005)
..halting cooling in clusters of Galaxies a ~30 years-long-standing puzzle Early estimates of their mass accretion rates ranged as high as 102-103 M⊙/yr. The problem with this interpretation of the data was that the mass sink for all this supposedly cooling and conden- sing gas has never been found. There is little evidence for emission lines from gas cooling much below about half the ambient temperature of the hot gas filling the cluster. The cooling process seems to have stopped in its tracks, implying that a compensating heat source resupplies the energy radiated by the gas in cluster cores. 5 keV cluster model Core entropy profiles of 9 classic cooling flow clusters. The dotted lines show the gas entropy (K = kTne-2/3) profiles derived from the azimuthally averaged and deprojected density and temperature profiles. The profiles look strikingly similar considering that the cluster temperatures in this sample range from 2.2 to 7.4 keV. Similarity in the entropy levels of the outer regions is consistent with the T2/3 scaling. At larger radii the profiles seem to asymptotically approach the solid line showing the expected entropy profile for a 5 keV cluster model, in which radiative cooling acts without triggering feedback. Simply adding a constant 10 keV cm2 to the asymptotic model gives the thick dashed line, which is a good representation of the observed profiles within about 50 kpc (assuming H0 = 70 km / s / Mpc). G.M. Voit, M. Donahue ApJ. 634 (1.12.2005) 955
V Q 4.2σ 9σ expected S-Z expected S-Z W X-rays observ. Hot gas properties 31 co-added WMAP cluster fields expected S-Z effect 4x bigger less e- Radiative decay of massive particles, e.g. axions of the KK-type to reconcile contradiction R. Lieu, J.P.D. Mittaz, M. Bonamente, S-N.Zhang, astro-ph/200510160 2.3σ expected S-Z The average WMAP observed and predicted radial profile for the 31 clusters. The continuum of the prediction curve is fixed by alignment with the 2o-3o data, which is at a level higher than that of the central 1o data points by 9σ (Q), 4.2σ (V), and 2.3σ (W).
Summary: • 1)Radiative decay of trapped massive axion(-like) particles • Constant component of Lx • 2)Oscillations between light ~axions &γ’s inside Bsolar-surface • Solar local effects in the eV-to-keV range • ⊗11-years solar cycle? • Suggestive for solar ~axionsearches below ~1keV 1eV • NO estimate of the solar axion spectrum below ~0.5 keV • 3)L2-8keV ≈ 1022±1erg/s ⇒ 10-12L⊙ • Paγ(100km/2kG/10-10GeV-1) +ωpl ≈ maorPVLAS • TSIdeficit @ sunspots • Low energy solar axion Luminosity • Intensity up to ~1‰L⊙?! PVLAS • 4)Beyond the Sunreal plasma modified • Galactic Center, Galaxy Clusters+S-Z effect, ..., CXRB?
… important signals were overlooked…. Otherwise F. Zwicky Morphological Astronomy, Berlin (1957) 132
“... it is not clear how these startling results must ultimately be interpreted.”
Scatter plots of magnetic variables in ARs. (mean value)2 = 0.39 B [Gauss] Regions of strong magnetic field, such as sunspot umbrae, are typically darker in X-rays than regions of intermediate field strength such as plage. A comparison of X-ray images of the Sun and full disk magnetograms shows a correlation between the locations of the brightest X-ray emission and the locations of bipolar magnetic active regions. G.H. Fisher, D.W. Longcope, T.R. Metcalf, A.A. Pevtsov, ApJ. 508 (1998) 885
CIXS SMART 1 This configuration corresponds to ~100m3 http://shaper.bnsc.rl.ac.uk:8080/SMART-1/CIXS_PART_1.doc
THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN X-RAY RADIANCE & MAGNETIC FLUX Lx B X-ray spectral radiance LX vs. total unsigned magnetic flux for solar and stellar objects. Dots: Quiet Sun. Squares: X-ray bright points. Diamonds: Solar active regions. Pluses: Solar disk averages. Crosses: G, K, and M dwarfs. Circles: T Tauri stars. Solid line: Power-law approximation LX ~ Φ1.15 of combined data set. A.A. Pevtsov et al., ApJ. 598 (1.12.2003) 1387
Quiet Sun1995 Yohkoh SXT (0.5-4.4keV) Rate Lx [erg / s·(arcsec)2] To get a corresponding total X-ray luminosity x2.5·106 A.A. Pevtsov et al., ApJ. 598 (1.12.2003) 1387
Coronal heating models M. Aschwanden, Physics of the Solar Corona (2004) p.360
Sunspots Images recorded in a roughly 10 Å wide band centered on 4306 Å of a relatively regular sunspot (left) and a more complex sunspot (right). The central, dark part of the sunspots is the umbra, the radially striated part is the penumbra. The surrounding bright cells with dark boundaries are gra- nular convection cells. Sunspot has a maximum diameter of ~30000 km (left), ~50000 km (right). S.K. Solanki, A.&A.Rev. 11 (2003) 153
←PVLAS Solar KK-axions, DiLella, Z., Astropart. Phys.19 (2003)145 http://www.unine.ch/phys/corpus/tpc2002/zioutas.ppt
TOTAL SOLAR IRRADIANCEvisible light strong evidence that the magnetic elements with higher flux are less bright. N.A. Krivova, S.K. Solanki,M. Fligge, Y.C. Unruh, A.&A. 399 (2003) L1 SOLAR X-RAYS ~ 0.5 – 4.4 keV correlation between the locations of the brightest X-ray emission and the locations of bipolar magnetic active regions. G.H. Fisher, D.W. Longcope, T.R. Metcalf, A.A. Pevtsov, ApJ. 508 (1998) 885 significant correlation between the absolute magnetic field strength and X-ray emission. A.O. Benz, S. Krucker, L.W. Acton, T.S. Bastian, A. & A. 320 (1997) 993
Pseudoscalar conversion and X-rays from the sun Carlson & Tseng , Phys. Lett. B 365 (1996) 193 … on the conversion of pseudoscalars produced in the sun’s interior in the presence of the sun’s external magnetic dipole field and sunspot-related magnetic fields. We find that the sunspot approach is superior. Measurements by the SXT/Yohkoh can measure the coupling constant down to gaγγ = 0.5-1x10-10 GeV-1, provided m < 7x10-6 eV. The expected X-ray count rate detected by Yohkoh’s unfiltered SXT due to pseudoscalar-photon conversion in the magnetic field of a sunspot (gaγγ = 10-10 GeV-1 & Φ=1023 maxwells). The sunspot’s center defines the impact parameter bRsolar. Unfortunately, the signal is dominated by background, which for such a large sunspot would be of the order of 4100 counts/s. limits forgaγγ&maxion The expected X-ray signal due to pseudoscalar-photon conversion in the sun’s general dipole field, taking gaγγ = 10-10 GeV-1 and BP =1 Gauss ⇏no significant X-ray count rate above background Search for ~ massless solar axions Bsun
E=4.2 keV, L=10 m: • N(ma=0.02 eV) = 0.222 • Nmax = 0.37 E=4.2 keV, L=100m: oscillations N(ma=0.02 eV) = 0.063, but N(ma=0.019 eV) =0.308 Nmax = 37 Biljana LAKIC • E=4.2 keV, L=100m: (oscillations) • N(ma=0.02 eV) = 0.063 but i.e. N(ma=0.019 eV) =0.308 • Nmax = 37 • E=4.2 keV, L=100m: (oscillations) • N(ma=0.02 eV) = 0.063 but i.e. N(ma=0.019 eV) =0.308 • Nmax = 37 • E=4.2 keV, L=100m: (oscillations) • N(ma=0.02 eV) = 0.063 but i.e. N(ma=0.019 eV) =0.308 • Nmax = 37
μflares are small flares that occur in active regions. They are hot (>10 MK) with presence of Fe K Complex Difficult to interpret thermal vs non-thermal spectrum or super-hot component. Possibly a lot of energy in the non-thermal electrons. Sept. 2004 http://www.soho15.org/PDF/hannah.pdf
The innerSUN ħωplasma≈ 300eV →● ↓~10 T M. Schüßler, M. Rempel A.&A. (2005), astro-ph/0506654 #) ● ↑ ħωplasma≈ 7 eV ℓabs~ 10 cm T ~ 2 MK ●←ħωplasma≈ 1eV -20000 km ℓabs~20 m ●←ħωplasma≈ 10-2eV surface ℓabs~100 km ⇩ http://science.msfc.nasa.gov/ssl/pad/solar/interior.htm #) also: M. Aschwanden, Physics of the Solar Corona (2004)175 Ifħωplasma≈ maxionc2~ resonance crossing (Primakoff)B>> (Primakoff)Coulomb New solar axion spectrum?